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Language learning versus vocational training: French, Arab and British voices speak about indigenous girls’ education in nineteenth-century colonial Algeria

机译:语言学习与职业培训:法国,阿拉伯和英国的声音谈论19世纪殖民地阿尔及利亚的土著女孩教育

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This article focuses on the first school for indigenous girls in Algeria that opened in Algiers in 1845. The founder, Eugénie Luce, taught girls the rudiments - French language and grammar, reading, arithmetic, and Arabic, while the afternoon hours were devoted to sewing. This early focus on teaching French in order to achieve the “fusion of the races” by forming women who would be intermediaries between the French colonisers and indigenous families, foundered in the early 1860s. In the place of language learning, the colonial administration decided to support vocational training and transformed the existing schools into embroidery workshops. The workshop continued to exist until 1906 under the responsibility of Luce’s granddaughter, Henriette Benaben. The two women’s friendship with British women tourists had an impact on the way they promoted their activities and played a role in the shift toward teaching vocational skills. An analysis of the debates and discussion surrounding the nature of the Luce-Benaben school and workshop provide a way to question how cosmopolitan encounters and imperial examples shaped educational experiments in Algeria. By including the voices of French colonial administrators, Arab notables, British women visitors, and, of course, Luce herself, the article argues for the importance of considering trans-imperial encounters, as well as the weight of individual actors, in the interpretation of shifting colonial educational policy.View full textDownload full textKeywordsAlgeria, Muslim girls, tourism, embroidery workshop, schoolRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2012.659263
机译:本文着重介绍1845年在阿尔及尔开设的第一所阿尔及利亚土著女孩学校。创始人Eugénie Luce教女孩们入门,包括法语和语法,阅读,算术和阿拉伯语,而下午的时间则专门用于缝制。早期的重点是教授法语,以期通过组建在1860年代初期创立的法国殖民者和土著家庭之间的中介人来实现“种族融合”。代替语言学习,殖民地政府决定支持职业培训,并将现有学校转变为刺绣车间。在卢斯的孙女亨利埃特·贝纳本(Henriette Benaben)的领导下,研讨会一直存在到1906年。两位女士与英国女游客的友谊对其促进活动的方式产生了影响,并在向职业技能教学的转变中发挥了作用。对围绕Luce-Benaben学校和讲习班的性质进行的辩论和讨论的分析,提供了一种质疑大都会遭遇和帝国榜样如何影响阿尔及利亚教育实验的方式。通过包括法国殖民地行政官,阿拉伯名流,英国女游客,当然还有卢斯本人的声音,文章主张在解释《帝国主义》时考虑跨帝国的遭遇以及单个演员的分量很重要。正在改变殖民地的教育政策。查看全文下载全文关键字阿尔及利亚,穆斯林女孩,旅游业,刺绣作坊,学校相关var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“泰勒和弗朗西斯在线”,servicescompact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook, stumbleupon,digg,google,more“,pubid:” ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b“};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2012.659263

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